Family Planning and the Millennium Development Goals
Cates
Willard
author
Abdool Karim
Quarraisha
author
Columbia University. Epidemiology
El-Sadr
Wafaa Mahmoud
author
Columbia University. Epidemiology
Columbia University. Medicine
Columbia University. International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs
Haffner
Debra W.
author
Kalema-Zikusoka
Gladys
author
Rogo
Khama
author
Petruney
Tricia
author
Averill
E. Megan Davidson
author
Columbia University. Epidemiology
originator
text
Articles
2010
English
The United Nations' (UN's) eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) (1) are widely accepted as the primary path to alleviating poverty worldwide. This month, world leaders convene to assess progress toward these goals (2). In the countdown to the MDG 2015 deadline and amid protracted economic recession, we need the most efficient, effective, and evidence-based means to accelerate progress toward all MDGs. Challenges must be considered in concert, and solutions must provide multidimensional dividends for the world's poor, or we risk unwisely dividing limited resources and diluting their impact. As authors from diverse communities, we emphasize here the influence that investments in rights-based family planning can have on achieving the MDGs.
Virology
Epidemiology
Science
329
5999
1603
1603
2010
10.1126/science.1197080
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:12866
NNC
NNC
2012-03-21 16:04:10 -0400
2012-03-21 16:19:34 -0400
6869
eng